No-knock and quick-knock warrants have been used by American police in a way that has created danger for both civilians and officers, as brought to light by the death of Breonna Taylor. They are frequently over-used, particularly in the case of drug-related offenses where exigent circumstances endangering a human life aren't typically present. The usage of no-knock and quick-knock warrants for drug-related offenses is a remnant of the failed war on drugs and should be reconsidered for the sake of citizens' fourth amendment rights and the safety of all involved
Police accountability has quickly pressed to the forefront of national conversations and subsequentl...
The Fourth Amendment permits police to use deadly force when there is an imminent threat of serious ...
George Floyd, an unarmed African American man, died after a white police officer kneeled on his neck...
(Excerpt) This Note proceeds in three parts. Part I begins by explaining what no-knock warrants are ...
On March 13, 2020, Breonna Taylor was fatally shot when officers of the Louisville Metro Police Depa...
Woven into the western world\u27s legal fabric by English courts over four centuries ago, the knock-...
As illegal drug usage continues to be an increasing concern of this country, the United States Supre...
The Supreme Court has cast judicial warrants as the Fourth Amendment gold standard for regulating po...
In an effort to wipe out the profits in illegal drug trafficking and thus strike a lethal blow again...
The Supreme Court has set out a roadmap for challenging one of the most common and insidious police ...
On March 13, 2020, Breonna Taylor settled into bed with her boyfriend Kenneth Walker after she finis...
This is the published version.Few social problems in the last decade have raised the public's consci...
No knock search warrants are issued frequently in Georgia nowadays, and such warrants have simply b...
The Supreme Court of the United States held that the common law , knock and announce rule was an in...
The Fourth Amendment, as decided by the Supreme Court in Payton v. New York, forbids police from arr...
Police accountability has quickly pressed to the forefront of national conversations and subsequentl...
The Fourth Amendment permits police to use deadly force when there is an imminent threat of serious ...
George Floyd, an unarmed African American man, died after a white police officer kneeled on his neck...
(Excerpt) This Note proceeds in three parts. Part I begins by explaining what no-knock warrants are ...
On March 13, 2020, Breonna Taylor was fatally shot when officers of the Louisville Metro Police Depa...
Woven into the western world\u27s legal fabric by English courts over four centuries ago, the knock-...
As illegal drug usage continues to be an increasing concern of this country, the United States Supre...
The Supreme Court has cast judicial warrants as the Fourth Amendment gold standard for regulating po...
In an effort to wipe out the profits in illegal drug trafficking and thus strike a lethal blow again...
The Supreme Court has set out a roadmap for challenging one of the most common and insidious police ...
On March 13, 2020, Breonna Taylor settled into bed with her boyfriend Kenneth Walker after she finis...
This is the published version.Few social problems in the last decade have raised the public's consci...
No knock search warrants are issued frequently in Georgia nowadays, and such warrants have simply b...
The Supreme Court of the United States held that the common law , knock and announce rule was an in...
The Fourth Amendment, as decided by the Supreme Court in Payton v. New York, forbids police from arr...
Police accountability has quickly pressed to the forefront of national conversations and subsequentl...
The Fourth Amendment permits police to use deadly force when there is an imminent threat of serious ...
George Floyd, an unarmed African American man, died after a white police officer kneeled on his neck...